Original Language
English
ISBN
978-90-6704-2321
Number of Pages
530 pages
Date of upload

02 Oct 2015

International Migration Law: Developing Paradigms and Key Challenges

This book encapsulates the law of international migration by examining developments first addressed in the volume on Migration and International Legal Norms (edited by T.A. Aleinikoff and V. Chetail; T.M.C. Asser Press, 2003) and by discussing wholly new themes. In this regard, the book considers emerging issues, such as the challenges posed by migration to state sovereignty and the protection of human rights as a result of the increasing tensions between anti-terrorism or security legislation and immigration measures, the impact of the use of biometrics technology to identify and better monitor international movements of persons, and enhanced cooperation on the European Union external border. The human rights of vulnerable groups of migrants are also examined. The issue of forced migration warrants a consideration of the international law relating to groups such as internally displaced persons, as well as the international community’s response to secondary movements of asylum seekers. Questions of state responsibility concerning, for example, stranded migrants and provision of consular protection and assistance to migrants are also discussed. Moreover, the expansion of regional legal frameworks concerned with migration, such as EU immigration and asylum law and policy and the growing case law on European citizenship, as well as developments in free movement regimes in Africa, the Americas and the Caribbean, are added to the analysis of the growing body of international migration law.

Available from T.M.C. Asser Press